I got a sample of a book that is Topaz...OCR/scanned...readable but not clean...I would like to read the whole book but don't like that it is Topaz format. Apparently St. Martin's Press does this a lot. I checked fictionwise and BOB and even mobipocket.com and it looks like so far it is only available on the Kindle. I'm contemplating whether to buy it even though it is in Topaz format but don't like the thought that so far Topaz drm is not broken. Other options are to: a - wait; b - buy paperback; c - library. I'm thinking c - library is going to be the winner.

I got a sample of a book that is Topaz...OCR/scanned...readable but not clean...I would like to read the whole book but don't like that it is Topaz format. Apparently St. Martin's Press does this a lot. I checked fictionwise and BOB and even mobipocket.com and it looks like so far it is only available on the Kindle. I'm contemplating whether to buy it even though it is in Topaz format but don't like the thought that so far Topaz drm is not broken. Other options are to: a - wait; b - buy paperback; c - library. I'm thinking c - library is going to be the winner.

Just curious if others avoid Topaz or not.

Avoid. My one adventure with Topaz from St. Martins Press caused my Kindle to freeze, so I'll use other options (including audiobook versions) for any books I really want.

Hmmm. I don't think I've run into one. What was the St Martin's book? I've been following the Dark Hunter saga, and don't recall anything that looked odd. [But I read most of them on Palm Pilot, and only the latest few on Kindle.] I'll wait to vote, till I see one.

Hate the things, wouldn't ever buy one. Aside from getting a sample chapter in order to determine the formatting, look (it's shown on-line, not via whispernet) at the size of the download. If it's in the 400-700KB range, it's not in Topaz formatting. If they don't give you the size of the download, but only tell you how many pages there are, be very suspicious. And if you do get one by mistake, send it back so Amazon will get the feedback.

Hmmm. I don't think I've run into one. What was the St Martin's book? I've been following the Dark Hunter saga, and don't recall anything that looked odd. [But I read most of them on Palm Pilot, and only the latest few on Kindle.] I'll wait to vote, till I see one.

It came from the Julia Spencer-Flemming freebies this past summer. Here is the thread about it. Starting at post number 8 you can see the complaints begin.

Hmmm. I don't think I've run into one. What was the St Martin's book? I've been following the Dark Hunter saga, and don't recall anything that looked odd. [But I read most of them on Palm Pilot, and only the latest few on Kindle.] I'll wait to vote, till I see one.

The St. Martin's one I just ran into was: To the Edge by Cindy Gerard. Another one I've run into was 'Scuse Me while I kill this guy by Leslie Langtry.

In both cases, on the web site, they give a page count but not a file size. This is when viewing the book info from a normal browser on a PC, not via the Kindle.

There are advantages to the single font and consistent style of AZW ebooks on the Kindle. TOPAZ allows embedded fonts, but the font technology seems to be very crude and the problem with embedded fonts is that some publishers choose truly terrible fonts. See the enclosed screenshot for one example, note the general raggedness of the font and the very narrow descender on the y's.

I've had a couple and they haven't been slow but I prefer having .azw/.mobi for the longevity. It won't completely keep me from buying a book but if Amazon starts moving more towards .tpz, I'll find myself shopping at Fictionwise a bit more often.

If I know the book is in the .TPZ format I won't buy it, and I will return anything that is in the .TPZ format. The reason is because I can strip the DRM from .AMZ formatted books and I want the ability to take my books with me if I ever go to another reader like the upcoming Plastic Logic device.

I won't buy a .tpz either. I halfway considered them for any books that I'd consider throw-away (no chance I'd want to read them a second time or on another device.) I downloaded some sample chapters and found that the pages tend to look awful - even if it's clean OCR, the fonts are often ugly and distracting and the spacing and margins are odd.

Now I see what people meant about the slowness. My previous topaz books have been fairly short. My current one is about 950 pages in print and turning pages is painful. It frequently takes several seconds. Sadly I couldn't find this book anywhere but Amazon.

I've had one Topaz book and one sample...that I am aware of. They didn't freeze but the font/spacing was a dead giveaway.

For me, the big advantage of the Kindle was the ease of reading and not having to adjust to different font sizes and style types (some which are harder to read than others). The Topaz format brings negates this benefit.

Yep, Topaz is just horrible, and I hate it. I just bought two books that I desperately wanted and that are only available on Kindle -- Phil Plait's "Bad Astronomy" and Neil deGrasse Tyson's "Death by Black Hole." Both turn out to be in Topaz format, and "Death by Black Hole" is in a particularly horrible font. I will now be returning both of them. Come on, Amazon! Knock it off with this Topaz crap! Or at the very least I hope the format is cracked soon so we can fix their stupidity and convert it to regular Mobipocket.